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The College News
Volume IV. No. 9
BIG INTERNATIONAL WAR WORK
OF Y. M. C. A. TOLD BY MR. EDDY
BRYN MAWR, PA.. NOVEMBER 28, 1917
Need of Money and Trained Women
to Carry on Work at the Front
What the Y. M. C. A. huts, fronted with
their red triangles, mean to the men of
the Allied armies, and to those in the
Allied and enemy prison camps, was viv-
idly told by Mr. Sherwood Eddy, the
noted Y. M. C. A. preacher, at a meeting
In Taylor Monday afternoon. Mr. Eddy
has Just returned from a tour of the
Western battle front, and is already on
his way to Russia.
The speaker described the Student
Friendship Fund, which is being raised
by American students to benefit men in
the Allied armies and the European
prison camps through the Y. M. 'C. A. and
to aid the Hostess Houses of the training
camps at home and abroad through the
Y. W. C. A.
Trained women, well rounded phys-
ically, mentally and morally, are needed
by the Y. M. C. A. abroad, according to
Mr. Eddy.
Over $1,000,000 of this fund has already
been raised, Vassar giving $15,000 and
Wellesley $16,000.
"If I don't win another battle I'll win a
moral one", General Pershing Is quoted
as saying to Mr. Eddy when they were
mapping out the war work of the Y. M.
C. A. together.
VARSITY UNDEFEATED
10-4 VICTORY OVER ALL-PHILA-
DELPHIA ENDS TRIUMPHANT
SEASON�CAPTAIN BACON'S
TEAM ACHIEVES BESTCO-
OPERATION OF YEAR
French Poet Due in December
M. Vatar Was Once His Pupil
M. Antoine Lebraz, poet and novelist,
will speak on "Le Genie Francais", under
the auspices of the French Club next
Tuesday, December 4th, at four-fifteen, in
Taylor Hall. M. Lebraz has spoken Ii.mv
several time a before and feels that he
knows Bryn Mawr thoroughly.
Having married an American, M. Le-
braz spends much of his time in this
country^ He was born in Brittany and
many of his novels deal with that section
of France. M. Vatar, Associate Professor
In Italian, was formerly his pupil at a
French university.
Mass Meeting Posted for Monday
For the second time in the history of
Bryn Mawr hockey, Varsity defeated All-
Philadelphia when It overwhelmed the
all-star team, 10-4, last Saturday. The
score more than tripled that of Bryn
Mawrs first victory, won last year, :!-0.
Except for E. Blddle It, left half, and A.
Stiles '19, left inside, a full Varsity team
lined up when the whistle blew. The
1917 Varsity, with the first substitutes,
is:
Varsity�G. Hearne 19, r.w.; M. Wil-
lard '17. r.l.; M. Carey "20. c.f.; A. Stiles
'19, l.i.; M. Tyler '19, l.w.; B. Weaver '20.
r.h.; It Bacon 18 (Capt.). c.h.; E. Blddle
'19, l.h.; M. Peacock "19, r.f.; M. Strauss
'18, If.; R. Catling 19, g.. /
First substitutes�P. Turle '18, K.>Blck-
ley '21, B. Schurman '21.
All the lirst substitutes won B.M.'s,
since they have played In two games.
Best Team Work of Season Wins Game
Saturday's victory showed the work of
coach and captain in the best team-work
of the season. Varsity for the first time
this year achieved the co-ordination of
eleven players working as one. Both
teams fought till the last minute. The
weakest part of the All-Philadelphia team
VAROITY SCORE FOR SEASON 36
Varsity hus won every game this
season with the exception of the 5-5
tie with Germantown two weeks ago.
The record of goals for and against
Varsity in the series stands 36 for, 18
against. The scores for the nine
years in wl.lch Varsity has met All-
Price 5 Cents
OWN ADAPTATION OF SCOTCH
SONGS ON WAKLiCHS PROGRAM
Artist Born in Russia and a United
States Citizen Despite German Name
LIEDER SINGER'S REPERTOIRE
HAS RANGE OF FIVE TONGLES
A number of stirring Scotch folk songs
which he has adapted to modernized har-
monic settings will mark the climax of
Reinhold Warlich's concert In Taylor
Friday evening, December 7. Mr. War-
llch worked out these adaptations during
the past summer in collaboration with
his friend and associate. Frits Kreisler.
His skillful re creation and sympathetic
Interpretation of the old ballads have at-
tracted a great deal of favorable com-
ment.
Writing of his political and civil status.
Mr. Warllch says:
"Having a German sounding name,
and through my friendship and close
artistic affiliation with the Austrian vio-
linist. Fritz Kreisler, people thought I
was a German. . . I was born In Pet-
rograd, Russia, as the son of the Director
of the Imperial Russian Court music, now
of the Orchestre Nationale:' my father
Is a Russian citizen and a general, and
I have two half-brothers, one an officer
In the Russian navy and another a pris-
oner in Germany who was. before the
outbreak of the war attached to the Rus-
sian Consul Ceneral in Berlin as consult-
BIG DRIVE PAS8E8 WAR COUNCIL
A mass mevtlng Is called for next Mon-
day evening by vote of the War Council.
The council's decision to begin a drive
at once for the Students' Friendship War j was their forward line, in spite of the
Fund, which closes December 15th, will good playing of Miss Cheston, captain,
be brought up for ratification, and sum- and J. Katzenstein '06; the wings trusted
maries of the work done so far by the j to hard center passing rather than to
executive departments given, dribbling to get the ball down the field.
An account of the Students' Fund, de-1 but Bryn Mawr's defense was too strong
scribed Monday by Mr. Sherwood Eddy, for these tactics,
is given on this page of the News. The Game in Detail
Thrift certificates of two and four-: In the first two minutes of play the ball
dollar denominations, to be sold from De- j was rushed down on the All-Philadelphia : fenslve game, but were unable to pene
L908 1909 .......... 6 .......... 7 1 3
1910 4
1911 1111 Weather prevented the game 4
I'M:: LSI I .......... I 1 3
111 IS .......... 6 3
ran :(
ran .......... 4 10
Philadelphia are:
All-Philadelphia Bryn Mawr ,n* c,v" en*lnper and taken prisoner by
goals goals ,he (!erman8 after outbreak of hostilities.
"I came to this country as quite a
young man and became a citizen in ItOl,
dividing my time between this country
and Europe. I was chauffeur for the
French Red Cross during practically the
first 14 months of the war anil returned
to this country In November. 1 !<!."�. to
take up my concert work again and raise
money for different charities in France.
Mr Elmer Zoller will play the accom-
(Coniini: �! pa pgfa 6, < oliiinn I)
cember 1st to January 1st. will stave off | left for a goal, shoved in by J. Katzen-
the next Liberty Loan until April, accord- - stein after the ball had rebounded from
Ing to Mrs. W. R. Smith, head of the Lib-
erty Loan Department, which will sell
the stick of R. Gatling '19. Varsity goal
JUNIORS WIN HOCKEY TITLE LASH 0F power- takes in $100
GREEN BANNER HANGS ON GYM
------------ Next Movie Scheduled for January
4 to 0 Defeat for Sophomores Due An audience of 100 itadMti applauded
to Weak Line�Mud Slows Game ""' s,',"n,, "f ""' ,,rjn Mi,wr raov,e8 ,n
------------ the gymnasium Saturday night. One
The green banner of 1919 was hung hundred dollars was taken in and $30
on the gymnasium for the first time when Betted, for Var lellef.
the Juniors beat the Sophomores. 4-0. In . The acrostic. Possession. Oppression,
the second game of the hockey finals last Wealth. Energy and Huln. spelt the
Thursday. 1917 has held the title for 'stages In the �Lash of Power." Goaded
the last three years. j by visions of Napoleon to 'wield the lash
A slippery field made the game slow. ' of power over a cringing humanity."
1920 owed their scoreless defeat to the in- '.John Rand rises by war profits to flnan-
effectiveness of their forward line. M. cial prominence. Mad with power, he
S. Cary at left wing time after time took , stampedes Wall Street. A cabal of rival
the ball down the field skilfully, but al- ! financiers employ an anarchist to bomb
ways failed to shoot. Every player on [ his mansion. The excitement of the
their defense put up a hard tight, espe- ' audience reached fever heat as the hands
daily B. Weaver, who was the star of the �f the clock came to I M, ,he mansion
g,m* blew up. and Rand woke to find the
1919s forwards played a strenuous de- ��,.�� of Power- , dream
The next movie will be shown In Janu-
trate the blue defense for a goal until , arr
toward the end of the first half, when M.
France If brought the ball down the field
keeper. Afte: the bully. M. Tyler. "19, | Into the circle. The Junior goal was
H
able from Federal Reserve banks with in-
terest on ten days' notice. Twenty-five I onds later she scored Varsity's first goal
Science Club May Hear Dr. Dakin
An associate of Or Alexis Carrel in
hem after vacation. (These are redeem- carried the fight Into the visitors' terri- | threatened several times in the second rieve, (n ncw method), of
4a. a_____*�*__�___a n_______�___�_ _ �_..�. ._ - _ - _...i*i_� -_a m> �_. .*� > half* from tha rierht �lilt* t\t tho nnnmlnf Ti
tory. a corner resulting, and a few sec- j half from the right side of the opposing |)r f|e ,, [)akJ|I ha� ^
cent stamps, as in England, will be sold
at banks and stores to be turned in as
payment for certificates.)
The farm can count on a steady aver-
from the edge of the circle. A second
shot from her. this time directly before
the goal, put Varsity in the lead.
Bryn Mawr worked both wings hard
age of fifteen workers next summer, ac throughout the game. The fullbacks
cording to the preliminary canvass made played far up the field. M. Peacock 19
last week, said Miss Ehlers. head of Food j often stopping Just at the end of the
Production. (Continued on page S. column 1 |
line, by L. Sloan and I). Rogers, but 19s
defense was more than equal to the situa-
tion.
1919 1920
H. Reld.........R.W.........D. Rogers
M. France.......R.I............U Sloaa
G Hearne.......C.F............L. Harian
A Stiles.........Id....... N Offatt
(Continued on page 6. column 1)
asked by
the Science Club to lecture here January
12. but has not been definitely secured
Doctor Dakin Is expected to speak on
the method of treating wounds which he
and Doctor Carrel have adopted from
their experience In the military hospitals
In France. The Science C1�b tried to get
Doctor Carrel, but he waa too busy to give
them a date

The College News
Volume IV. No. 9
BIG INTERNATIONAL WAR WORK
OF Y. M. C. A. TOLD BY MR. EDDY
BRYN MAWR, PA.. NOVEMBER 28, 1917
Need of Money and Trained Women
to Carry on Work at the Front
What the Y. M. C. A. huts, fronted with
their red triangles, mean to the men of
the Allied armies, and to those in the
Allied and enemy prison camps, was viv-
idly told by Mr. Sherwood Eddy, the
noted Y. M. C. A. preacher, at a meeting
In Taylor Monday afternoon. Mr. Eddy
has Just returned from a tour of the
Western battle front, and is already on
his way to Russia.
The speaker described the Student
Friendship Fund, which is being raised
by American students to benefit men in
the Allied armies and the European
prison camps through the Y. M. 'C. A. and
to aid the Hostess Houses of the training
camps at home and abroad through the
Y. W. C. A.
Trained women, well rounded phys-
ically, mentally and morally, are needed
by the Y. M. C. A. abroad, according to
Mr. Eddy.
Over $1,000,000 of this fund has already
been raised, Vassar giving $15,000 and
Wellesley $16,000.
"If I don't win another battle I'll win a
moral one", General Pershing Is quoted
as saying to Mr. Eddy when they were
mapping out the war work of the Y. M.
C. A. together.
VARSITY UNDEFEATED
10-4 VICTORY OVER ALL-PHILA-
DELPHIA ENDS TRIUMPHANT
SEASON�CAPTAIN BACON'S
TEAM ACHIEVES BESTCO-
OPERATION OF YEAR
French Poet Due in December
M. Vatar Was Once His Pupil
M. Antoine Lebraz, poet and novelist,
will speak on "Le Genie Francais", under
the auspices of the French Club next
Tuesday, December 4th, at four-fifteen, in
Taylor Hall. M. Lebraz has spoken Ii.mv
several time a before and feels that he
knows Bryn Mawr thoroughly.
Having married an American, M. Le-
braz spends much of his time in this
country^ He was born in Brittany and
many of his novels deal with that section
of France. M. Vatar, Associate Professor
In Italian, was formerly his pupil at a
French university.
Mass Meeting Posted for Monday
For the second time in the history of
Bryn Mawr hockey, Varsity defeated All-
Philadelphia when It overwhelmed the
all-star team, 10-4, last Saturday. The
score more than tripled that of Bryn
Mawrs first victory, won last year, :!-0.
Except for E. Blddle It, left half, and A.
Stiles '19, left inside, a full Varsity team
lined up when the whistle blew. The
1917 Varsity, with the first substitutes,
is:
Varsity�G. Hearne 19, r.w.; M. Wil-
lard '17. r.l.; M. Carey "20. c.f.; A. Stiles
'19, l.i.; M. Tyler '19, l.w.; B. Weaver '20.
r.h.; It Bacon 18 (Capt.). c.h.; E. Blddle
'19, l.h.; M. Peacock "19, r.f.; M. Strauss
'18, If.; R. Catling 19, g.. /
First substitutes�P. Turle '18, K.>Blck-
ley '21, B. Schurman '21.
All the lirst substitutes won B.M.'s,
since they have played In two games.
Best Team Work of Season Wins Game
Saturday's victory showed the work of
coach and captain in the best team-work
of the season. Varsity for the first time
this year achieved the co-ordination of
eleven players working as one. Both
teams fought till the last minute. The
weakest part of the All-Philadelphia team
VAROITY SCORE FOR SEASON 36
Varsity hus won every game this
season with the exception of the 5-5
tie with Germantown two weeks ago.
The record of goals for and against
Varsity in the series stands 36 for, 18
against. The scores for the nine
years in wl.lch Varsity has met All-
Price 5 Cents
OWN ADAPTATION OF SCOTCH
SONGS ON WAKLiCHS PROGRAM
Artist Born in Russia and a United
States Citizen Despite German Name
LIEDER SINGER'S REPERTOIRE
HAS RANGE OF FIVE TONGLES
A number of stirring Scotch folk songs
which he has adapted to modernized har-
monic settings will mark the climax of
Reinhold Warlich's concert In Taylor
Friday evening, December 7. Mr. War-
llch worked out these adaptations during
the past summer in collaboration with
his friend and associate. Frits Kreisler.
His skillful re creation and sympathetic
Interpretation of the old ballads have at-
tracted a great deal of favorable com-
ment.
Writing of his political and civil status.
Mr. Warllch says:
"Having a German sounding name,
and through my friendship and close
artistic affiliation with the Austrian vio-
linist. Fritz Kreisler, people thought I
was a German. . . I was born In Pet-
rograd, Russia, as the son of the Director
of the Imperial Russian Court music, now
of the Orchestre Nationale:' my father
Is a Russian citizen and a general, and
I have two half-brothers, one an officer
In the Russian navy and another a pris-
oner in Germany who was. before the
outbreak of the war attached to the Rus-
sian Consul Ceneral in Berlin as consult-
BIG DRIVE PAS8E8 WAR COUNCIL
A mass mevtlng Is called for next Mon-
day evening by vote of the War Council.
The council's decision to begin a drive
at once for the Students' Friendship War j was their forward line, in spite of the
Fund, which closes December 15th, will good playing of Miss Cheston, captain,
be brought up for ratification, and sum- and J. Katzenstein '06; the wings trusted
maries of the work done so far by the j to hard center passing rather than to
executive departments given, dribbling to get the ball down the field.
An account of the Students' Fund, de-1 but Bryn Mawr's defense was too strong
scribed Monday by Mr. Sherwood Eddy, for these tactics,
is given on this page of the News. The Game in Detail
Thrift certificates of two and four-: In the first two minutes of play the ball
dollar denominations, to be sold from De- j was rushed down on the All-Philadelphia : fenslve game, but were unable to pene
L908 1909 .......... 6 .......... 7 1 3
1910 4
1911 1111 Weather prevented the game 4
I'M:: LSI I .......... I 1 3
111 IS .......... 6 3
ran :(
ran .......... 4 10
Philadelphia are:
All-Philadelphia Bryn Mawr ,n* c,v" en*lnper and taken prisoner by
goals goals ,he (!erman8 after outbreak of hostilities.
"I came to this country as quite a
young man and became a citizen in ItOl,
dividing my time between this country
and Europe. I was chauffeur for the
French Red Cross during practically the
first 14 months of the war anil returned
to this country In November. 1 ! �_. .*� > half* from tha rierht �lilt* t\t tho nnnmlnf Ti
tory. a corner resulting, and a few sec- j half from the right side of the opposing |)r f|e ,, [)akJ|I ha� ^
cent stamps, as in England, will be sold
at banks and stores to be turned in as
payment for certificates.)
The farm can count on a steady aver-
from the edge of the circle. A second
shot from her. this time directly before
the goal, put Varsity in the lead.
Bryn Mawr worked both wings hard
age of fifteen workers next summer, ac throughout the game. The fullbacks
cording to the preliminary canvass made played far up the field. M. Peacock 19
last week, said Miss Ehlers. head of Food j often stopping Just at the end of the
Production. (Continued on page S. column 1 |
line, by L. Sloan and I). Rogers, but 19s
defense was more than equal to the situa-
tion.
1919 1920
H. Reld.........R.W.........D. Rogers
M. France.......R.I............U Sloaa
G Hearne.......C.F............L. Harian
A Stiles.........Id....... N Offatt
(Continued on page 6. column 1)
asked by
the Science Club to lecture here January
12. but has not been definitely secured
Doctor Dakin Is expected to speak on
the method of treating wounds which he
and Doctor Carrel have adopted from
their experience In the military hospitals
In France. The Science C1�b tried to get
Doctor Carrel, but he waa too busy to give
them a date